CLOSE UP 2.0
Editta Braun about the feminist aspect of CLOSE UP:
„I think that nowadays women’s rights are more and more in danger, even in our European societies. Many different, global crises overlap each other, we are the middle of epochal changes and challenges. And, very frighting, I observe a lash back to conservative, pre-democratic values, also in Europe. We women have to talk about that, we have to fight. And as I am artist, my only weapons are my artistic works. Theatre and performance is my Agora, my speakers’desk, my arena. I am a feminist. So it is clear that in my work I talk about feminist topics. In my way, with my means. CLOSE UP brings five female dancers and 1 pianist on stage - they fight, struggle, suffer, are light and heavy, happy and sad. Woven to each other by a deep complicity“.
Cécile Thévenot
After studying musicology at the Université de Bourgogne, Cécile Thévenot graduated at the Dijon Conservatoty (D.E.M.), passed her licence (piano) at the Music Academy of Turku (Finland) and in 2015 the Diplome d'État as a pianist at the Cefedem de Lorraine in Metz. Turned towards New Music, Improvisation and Experimental Music. In the collective Générale d'Expérimentation (Dijon) collaboration among others with Didier Ashour, Lê Quanh Ninh, Sylvain Kassap and Didier Petit. Concerts in France, Belgium, Finland, Estonia and Germany. Increasing focus on performing arts, collaboration with the sculptress and video artist Lucile Hoffmann, the marionettist Perrine Ferrafiat and the sound sculptrice Stefania Becheanu.
composition, live-piano: Cécile Thévenot
composition, musical direction: Thierry Zaboitzeff www.zaboitzeff.org
dance, movement research: Sandra Hofstötter, Anna Lis, Martyna Lorenc, Anna Maria Müller, Sonia Borkowicz (Katja Bablick)
lightdesign, technical direction: Thomas Hinterberger
dramaturgy: Gerda Poschmann-Reichenau
choreography, artistic direction: Editta Braun
photography: Bettina Frenzel
Management: Antje Papke, management@editta-braun.com
technical requirements: stage size min. 10m x 9m, grand piano tuned, black dance floor,
curtains, good light- and sound equipment; one extra day of set up needed
«Close Up 2.0» - Technical Rider
Press about the previous version of this piece:
Visually, the effect of limiting the movement to hide parts of the dancers' bodies is both absorbing and unnerving. The richness of the imagery brings to mind Hieronymus Bosch's human limbs, that protrude angularly from eggs and other creatures: Braun has most viscerally brought to life the deformed and fragmented leftovers of a psyche.
[ ... ]
The final encounter and touch (between dancer and musician) is satisfying, and clearly points towards a less constrained future. A gloriously tongue-in-cheek (or butt cheek on keys) piece of surreal dance invention. (TV Bomb 01.02.2016)
... like all the best work at Manipulate, Close Up raises profound questions about the familiar shapes around us and how easily those perceptions can be disrupted, even as it also leads the pianist into an unsettling encounter with forces in her music of which she is barely aware, until they literally come to nudge her in the back.”
(The Scotsman, 06.02.2016)
Across an hour, the initial impact dwindles, but the sheer stamina of the performers – and the spurt of ensemble bopping when Michael Jackson's Billie Jean hits the keys – remains strangely fascinating.“
(Herald Scotland 02.02.2106)